Okay, let's see...#1 the regular way#2 while squinting#3 in a hat#4 out loud#5 in an Australian accent#6 on the tube#7 using your finger to track the words on the page...That's it. I'm out of ideas now.

gr wrote:So, when people give you that shocked look after you tell them you "wrote a novel yesterday", before they can recover say, "Well actually it was closer to a hundred thousand novels."

AAaaaaaaaaHAAAAAaaaaHHHHhhH! I see what you mean now!

Although today I might try#8 the regular way while squinting in a hat out loud in an Australian accent on the tube using your finger to track the words on the page

"Some dice only have sixes." nom, 19 Oct 2013"Piggy, I'm beginning to wonder if you are the best person to take advice from." Jaysen, 26 Sept 2014

I am now 2028/98304ths the way through the Auld Lang Syne novel swarm -- which, given the way combinatorial explosion works is a lot further than you might think. And, perhaps, as far as you might expect, given my commitment to read all 98,304 versions and most of them simultaneously. Have to say some good material in here, folks!

Kudos along the way for the idyll of youth that is B. Morris Allen's Chapter 10.

Hi,Just want to say a big thank you to @pigfender for letting me take part in this year’s Novel In A Day, even though I had missed the official deadline.

It was such fun and the books are so good. It’s also uncanny how it all holds together even though we didn’t know the plot. For example, I had no idea that it was about time travel!I’m a terrible procrastinator and can never seem to finish writing anything, but I’ve managed to write a Novel In A Day twice — so maybe all I need is a good plot and a deadline?It was great to collaborate with such a talented bunch of writers. We wrote 3 novels in a day! YAY!